6 Top iOS Photo Apps

Is your iPhone's Photo Stream turning into a deluge? Use these apps to edit, organize and share pictures and videos.

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You have your own reasons to keep certain photos from others' eyes. Private Photo Vault by software developer William Sidell lets you store your photos in a secret gallery. This free app lets you select photos and videos you want to keep hidden by passcode-protecting them. During setup, after you punch in your four-digit PIN, the app prompts you to email the passcode to yourself because if you forget the passcode, you are completely locked out of the private repository.

Once you're in your secured vault, you can create slideshows and export, delete and move pics. Using the wireless sync feature, you can upload photos from your computer straight to your private vault. In addition, you can create multiple private albums and password-protect albums individually. Private Photo Vault runs on iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad and needs iOS 4.3 or later. The $2.99 Pro version gives you the option to establish an onscreen pattern as a passcode instead of a PIN.

According to the well developed updated technology the different applicatios are introduced in market as well as it helps the people to upgrade themselves. Like that the iOS application that introduced in several smartphones is a new one. The qualities and the features that introduced in this application are user-friendly as well as easy to access. People are very much interested towards keeping the photos of every moment. But to makes the photos more attractive we need the best application that introduced in the iOS application. But if we can keep all the photos in a Flip book then can store it for a long time as well as the attachment can be more effective. Flip Book Photos New York

I love Afterlight as a photo editor, but you have to get this app called Photo Candy. It's a brand new app that allows you to add patterns & shapes on top of your photos. The effect is like no other app out there. It's awesome! Check it out here. https://itunes.apple.com/us/ap...

Among 688 respondents, 46% have deployed mobile apps, with an additional 24% planning to in the next year. Soon all apps will look like mobile apps – and it's past time for those with no plans to get cracking.